When Her Father Mocked Her Uniform, One File Exposed His Lie-congtien

The marble floor inside the Cook County Courthouse held the kind of cold that traveled straight through leather soles.

Captain Maya Vance felt it with every step.

The hallway smelled like burnt coffee, damp wool, old paper, and rainwater tracked in from the street.

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Her father had one hand clamped around her arm.

Arthur Vance did not grab people like a desperate man.

He grabbed them like a man who had spent his whole life believing the room would forgive him for it.

“You’re a disgrace, Maya,” he hissed.

The words were meant for her, but he made sure the people near Courtroom 302 could hear.

A man holding a paper coffee cup glanced up and then quickly looked away.

A woman with a wet umbrella froze beside the wall directory.

Arthur leaned closer, his expensive cologne cutting through the courthouse smell.

“Showing up here without a lawyer? In that uniform? You’re going to lose the family estate today, and there is nothing you can do about it.”

Maya looked down at his fingers wrinkling the sleeve of her dress uniform.

For a moment, she did not move.

That was the part of discipline people misunderstood.

It was not the absence of anger.

It was anger standing at attention until it was called.

She pulled her arm free.

Arthur’s polished shoes scraped backward on the stone floor.

Mr. Sterling, his attorney, caught him at the elbow with one hand and adjusted his silk tie with the other.

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